In Africa Who controls the resources—and for whose benefit? (Continued)

Expanded profiles for East Africa, Francophone countries, or resource-by-resource deep dives (e.g. cobalt, lithium, oil)
East Africa Profiles-
1. Ethiopia
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Main Resources: Gold, Tantalum, Potash, Hydropower (GERD)
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Control: State-owned companies, some foreign investors; land leased to Gulf & Indian agribusinesses
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Key Companies: MIDROC Gold (owned by Al Amoudi), Chinese firms in mining/infrastructure
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Government (infrastructure diplomacy), foreign investors
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Losers: Local farmers (land grabs), pastoralists displaced by dams, transparency is low
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2. Kenya
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Main Resources: Titanium, Soda Ash, Rare Earths, Oil (Turkana)
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Control: Foreign companies (mining); nascent oil sector with state oversight
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Key Companies: Base Titanium (Australia), Tullow Oil (UK)
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Export revenue, foreign firms
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Losers: Local communities in Turkana (land conflicts, minimal services)
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3. Uganda
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Main Resources: Oil, Gold, Coffee, Cobalt
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Control: Heavily state-influenced; oil sector still developing
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Key Companies: TotalEnergies, CNOOC (China), UNOC (Uganda National Oil Company)
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: State elite, foreign oil firms
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Losers: Environmental risks to Lake Albert, human rights issues in pipeline construction
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4. Tanzania
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Main Resources: Gold, Natural Gas, Graphite, Rare Earths
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Control: Mixed; recent shift toward more state control under mining reforms
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Key Companies: Barrick Gold, AngloGold, various Australian and Chinese mining companies
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Government (better royalties), international partners
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Losers: Artisanal miners, some local communities
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Francophone Africa Profiles
5. Mali
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Main Resources: Gold, Cotton
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Control: Gold dominated by foreign companies; cotton largely state-organized
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Key Companies: Barrick Gold, B2Gold (Canada), AngloGold
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Foreign companies, military elites
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Losers: Rural communities, environment, with increasing insecurity from armed groups
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6. Niger
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Main Resources: Uranium, Oil
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Control: Historically French via Orano; now shifting to Russian/Chinese interest
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Key Companies: Orano (France), CNPC (China), Savannah Energy (UK)
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Foreign nations (nuclear fuel), national elite
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Losers: Local people in Arlit region (radiation risks, minimal development)
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7. Senegal
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Main Resources: Phosphates, Gold, Offshore Oil & Gas
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Control: Senegalese state partnerships with foreign investors
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Key Companies: BP, Kosmos Energy, Petrosen (national oil company)
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Potential future revenue for state
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Losers: Concerns over contracts, fisheries impact
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8. Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
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Main Resources: Cocoa, Oil, Gold
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Control: Government-regulated but highly open to foreign firms
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Key Companies: Perseus Mining, Eni, TotalEnergies
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Who Benefits:
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Winners: Agro-export economy, multinationals
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Losers: Cocoa farmers (price volatility), mining communities
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Resource-Specific Deep Dives-
Cobalt (Key to Electric Vehicles & Batteries)
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Primary Source: DR Congo (over 70% of world supply)
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Control: Glencore, China Molybdenum, artisanal miners
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Concerns: Child labor, toxic waste, informal mining
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Geopolitics: US, EU, and China competing to secure supply chains
Lithium (Essential for Green Tech)
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Countries: Zimbabwe, Namibia, Mali, DRC
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Control: Chinese firms dominate (Sinomine, Zhejiang Huayou, Chengxin Lithium)
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Opportunities: African governments pushing for local processing
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Challenges: Land displacement, poor oversight, minimal benefit to locals
Oil & Gas
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Major Producers: Nigeria, Angola, Libya, Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Equatorial Guinea
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Control: Mix of state-owned firms and global giants (Shell, Total, Eni, ExxonMobil)
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Challenges: Corruption, volatility, "Dutch disease" (undermining other sectors)
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Future Risks: Global shift to renewables may shrink demand.
Resource Control Profiles: East Africa vs Francophone Africa
Region | Country | Main Resource(s) | Foreign Influence | Key Companies | Who Benefits |
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East Africa | Ethiopia | Gold, Potash, Tantalum | China, Gulf States | MIDROC, Chinese firms | Elites, foreign investors |
Kenya | Titanium, Oil, Rare Earths | UK, Australia | Tullow Oil, Base Titanium | Foreign firms, elites | |
Uganda | Oil, Gold | China, France | TotalEnergies, CNOOC | Government, foreign oil firms | |
Tanzania | Gold, Gas, Graphite | Canada, China, Australia | Barrick Gold, AngloGold | State, investors | |
Francophone Africa | Mali | Gold | Canada, Russia | Barrick, B2Gold | Foreign miners, elites |
Niger | Uranium, Oil | France, China, Russia | Orano, CNPC | Elites, foreign governments | |
Senegal | Phosphates, Oil & Gas | UK, USA | BP, Kosmos Energy | Government, international partners | |
Ivory Coast | Cocoa, Gold, Oil | France, Canada | Perseus Mining, Total |
1. Lithium (Electric Vehicle Boom Mineral)
Country | Major Sites | Foreign Influence | Key Companies | Who Benefits |
---|---|---|---|---|
Zimbabwe | Bikita, Arcadia | China, Australia | Zhejiang Huayou, Prospect Lithium | Chinese firms, local elites |
Dem. Rep. Congo | Manono | China | AVZ Minerals, Zijin Mining | Foreign investors, gov. elites |
Namibia | Uis, Karibib | Australia, China | Lepidico, Desert Lion | Foreign miners, state royalties |
Mali | Bougouni, Goulamina | China, UK | Ganfeng Lithium, Kodal Minerals | Foreign firms, elite class |
➡ China dominates lithium investments; locals often get few jobs or environmental protections.
2. Uranium (Nuclear Power & Defense)
Country | Major Sites | Foreign Influence | Key Companies | Who Benefits |
---|---|---|---|---|
Niger | Arlit, Imouraren | France, China, Russia | Orano (France), CNNC | France, government elites |
Namibia | Rossing, Husab | China, Canada | China General Nuclear, Rio Tinto | Foreign states, some state revenue |
South Africa | Karoo Basin | France, India | Uranium One, Indian firms | Private sector, foreign buyers |
➡ France is heavily reliant on Niger’s uranium for its nuclear power — but local communities remain impoverished.
3. Oil & Gas (Top Revenue Resource)
Country | Key Basins/Fields | Foreign Influence | Key Companies | Who Benefits |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nigeria | Niger Delta, Offshore | US, UK, China | Shell, Chevron, Total, NNPC | Gov. elites, foreign firms |
Angola | Offshore fields | US, China, EU | Sonangol, Total, Chevron | Elites, foreign investors |
Libya | Sirte Basin, Murzuq | Italy, France | ENI, Total, NOC | Political factions, European markets |
Mozambique | Rovuma Basin (Gas) | US, France, China | TotalEnergies, ExxonMobil, CNPC | Elites, LNG export buyers |
Senegal | Sangomar, GTA Gas | UK, Australia | BP, Kosmos Energy | Gov. + foreign stakeholders |
➡ Despite vast oil wealth, countries like Nigeria and Angola still face fuel shortages domestically.
4. Gold (Monetary & Tech Use)
Country | Key Mining Areas | Foreign Influence | Key Companies | Who Benefits |
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Ghana | Obuasi, Tarkwa | Canada, Australia | AngloGold Ashanti, Newmont | Exporters, elites |
South Africa | Witwatersrand Basin | USA, UK | Gold Fields, Harmony Gold | Mining houses, some local revenue |
Mali | Sadiola, Loulo | Canada, Russia | Barrick Gold, B2Gold | Foreign firms, local military gov |
Burkina Faso | Essakane, Houndé | Canada | IAMGOLD, Endeavour Mining | Foreign firms, unstable benefits |
➡ Gold is often smuggled out of countries through informal routes, robbing governments of billions in tax revenue.
Comparison Table: Resource Control vs Benefit
Country | Resource | Who Owns the Land | Who Profits Most |
---|---|---|---|
DR Congo | Cobalt, Lithium | State-owned, tribal lands | China (CMOC), Glencore, Congolese elites |
Zimbabwe | Lithium | State, Indigenous lands | Chinese firms, political elites |
Niger | Uranium | State, Tuareg lands | France (Orano), China |
Nigeria | Oil | State, Niger Delta communities | Shell, Chevron, Nigerian elites |
Ghana | Gold | State, traditional stools | Newmont, government elites |
Angola | Oil | State | TotalEnergies, Chevron, government |
Mali | Gold, Lithium | State, ethnic militias | Barrick, Russian groups, military elites |
Namibia | Uranium, Lithium | State, local communities | China (CGN), Rio Tinto |
Timeline: Who Controlled Africa’s Key Resources (2005–2025)
Year | China Influence | Western Influence | African Control |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Low (2/10) | High (10/10) | Minimal (1/10) |
2010 | Growing (4/10) | Still dominant | Slight increase |
2015 | Competitive | Declining | Increasing |
2020 | Surpassing West | Moderate | Growing slowly |
2025 | High (10/10) | Moderate (5/10) | Still limited |
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China’s role grew rapidly in the 2010s with Belt and Road deals and mining contracts.
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Western dominance (esp. France, UK, US companies) began fading in some zones.
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African governments have slowly increased formal control, but actual profit-sharing remains unequal, often favoring foreign and elite groups.
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